On the go and no time to finish that story right now? Your News is the place for you to save content to read later from any device. Register with us and content you save will appear here so you can access them to read later.

And it's round three in the ongoing war of words between Kim Kardashian and Mad Men star Jon Hamm.

Sorry Kardashian, but it looks like Hamm still thinks you're an "idiot".

Appearing on The Today Show with his Mad Men co-stars, Hamm stuck to his guns and stood by remarks he made about Kardashian and fellow reality TV star Paris Hilton in a recent interview.

"We're at a place where the idea of being 'elite' is somehow considered a negative," he said in the new April issue of Elle UK magazine. "Whether it's Paris Hilton or Kim Kardashian or whoever, stupidity is certainly celebrated.

"Being a f**king idiot is a valuable commodity in this culture because you're rewarded significantly," he opined.

"And incuriousness has become cool. It's celebrated. It doesn't make sense to me."

Kardashian swiftly fired back, branding his comments as "careless".

Taking to her Twitter page last week, she wrote: "I just heard about the comment Jon Hamm made about me in an interview. I respect Jon and I am a firm believer that everyone is entitled to their own opinion and that not everyone takes the same path in life," Kardashian wrote.

"We're all working hard and we all have to respect one another. Calling someone who runs their own businesses, is a part of a successful TV show, produces, writes, designs and creates 'stupid' is, in my opinion, careless."

"It's surprising to me that it has become remotely a story. I don't know Ms Kardashian, I know her public persona," he said.

"What I said was meant to be more on pervasiveness of something in our culture, not personal, but she took offence to it and that is her right."

All is forgiven? I should cocoa.

"I don't think [my comments] were careless. I think they were accurate," Hamm told Matt Lauer on the Today Show.

"It's a part of our culture that I certainly don't identify with, and I don't really understand the appeal of it other than in a sort of car crash sensibility, and it's not something that I partake in or enjoy, but it is what it is, and here we are."

"I agree," he said. "He said it very eloquently. I agree with everything he said. I think our society enjoys to turn on the television and see someone who's maybe awful and they can say, 'Maybe I'm not as terrible as that person'."

Chimed Hamm: "There are a lot of channels on the dial and those channels need to be filled up with things. It's different strokes for different folks."